Universities have been left walking a political tightrope after a parliamentary vote to water down the power of Israelās Supreme Court triggered mass civil unrest.
Thousands of protesters have taken to the streets after the Knesset voted to strip the Supreme Court of the ability to overrule some government decisions on the basis of the āreasonablenessā standard, while opinion polls have found that only a quarter of voters support the change. The court is due to hear appeals against the law in September.
In a carefully worded statement on the day of the vote, Israelās Association of University Heads called on academics to be āactive citizens in any legal way they can, regardless of their positionā, while also stating that the āconstitutional revolutionā under way āthreatens the democratic characterā of the country.
University presidentsā opposition to the changes has irked some, with a petition to āĀ of the political gameā gathering over 300 signatures from prominent professors at the time of writing, some of whom said in accompanying statements that they opposed the law itself.
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But presidents who spoke withĀ Times Higher EducationĀ said that, with the well-being of their institutions in the balance, they had no choice but to speak out.
āWeāre not about politics, but we are about values, and one of our values means equality [and] lack of discrimination. All of those come with having a liberal democracy,ā said Asher Cohen, president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HUJI). āYou see changes in the rules of the game without wide agreement only in dictatorships.ā
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Ron Robin, president of the University of Haifa, said it was āabsolutely not possibleā for heads to stay silent. āThis is not an isolated discussion over a particular law, this is a struggle for the nature of society,ā he said. āUniversities can only thrive within democratic ecosystems.ā
Both acknowledged some of their staff and faculty supported the new law, with Professor Robin putting the figure at about 20 per cent, but said their universitiesā senates had compelled them to oppose it.
Professor Asher said HUJIās senate had called for a strike, but that he had held off. Aside from the limited impact such a move would have had over summer recess, the law would force him to dock pay from the minority who supported the change.
He said one development that would cross the threshold for a strike would be the government denying the court the right to challenge the new law. āWe will stand by the law, and everyone should,ā he said.
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āIf it will get there then we are in a real, real serious constitutional crisis. We donāt know whatās going to happen.ā
Haifaās rector, Gur Elroy, was among the army reservists who publicly resigned their military positions in response to the vote, writingĀ Ā to local media that he could āno longer continue to serve a government that turns Israel into a non-democratic stateā. Around 10,000 other part-time soldiers have promised toĀ .
āThis is still a country where academics are on a pedestal of some kind, so even if we do something that has been done by thousands of others it has greater resonance,ā said Professor Robin.
The headsā statement said that a neutering of the court would prevent them using legal means to oppose āharassmentā of academia by the government. āWe have a lot to lose if we lose our autonomy,ā said Professor Robin. āItās going to be a long struggle.ā
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